Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Hogs return after close call

Arkansas let crown slip away a year ago

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OMAHA, Neb. — Arkansas was so close to winning its first national championsh­ip in baseball a year ago that Casey Martin, from his position at third base, started seeing the celebrator­y dog pile in his mind’s eye. Oregon State was batting in the top of the ninth inning with two outs and a runner on third base. Arkansas led, 3-2, and was on the verge of a two-game sweep in the College World Series best-of-three final.

“Man, I was starting to get real excited, real jumpy,” Martin, now the shortstop, recalled Friday. “Then when it happened, something just kind of dropped.” Something dropped, all right.

In perhaps the most memorable play at TD Ameritrade Park since it opened in 2011, Oregon State’s Cadyn Grenier popped a ball high behind first base and toward the stands. Three fielders converged. No one took charge. The ball hit the ground.

Given another chance, Grenier singled to start a three-run ninth that gave the Beavers a 5-3 win, and the next night the Cowboys wrapped up the national title on Kevin Abel’s two-hitter in a 5-0 win.

The Razorbacks party line: They didn’t allow themselves to stew over their misfortune and let it carry over to this season. Only three everyday players from 2018 returned, none of them principles in the foul ball play.

Now No. 5 national seed Arkansas is back at the CWS, and the Hogs might be better than a year ago with an offense in the top 20 nationally in the major categories and four pitchers drafted in the first nine rounds.

“For me, personally, it was hard to let go,” Martin said of last year’s missed opportunit­y. “But what a ride it was. I’m just happy we were able to get back.”

Arkansas (46-18) opens play Saturday night against Florida State (41-21), which will be trying to win retiring coach and NCAA all-time wins leader Mike Martin his first national championsh­ip in his 17 visits to Omaha.

“I think some guys feel like we have some unfinished business up here, just because we want to win the national championsh­ip and be the first one in Arkansas history,” Hogs pitcher Isaiah Campbell said. “We have new kids who weren’t even here last year, they were playing summer ball. We kind of want to make our own history and write our own story this year.”

Coaches were asked if their team couldn’t win the title, who would they want it to go to? Martin, hands down. The 75-year-old with 2,028 wins over 40 years was praised more for his gentlemanl­y demeanor than for his considerab­le coaching prowess.

“You know if you beat him, he’s going to be so compliment­ary, and if he beats you, he’s going to be so gracious and never make you feel bad,” Louisville’s Dan McDonnell said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Casey Martin, left, and Arkansas are hungry for a title after coming within an out of the crown last year and falling short.
The Associated Press Casey Martin, left, and Arkansas are hungry for a title after coming within an out of the crown last year and falling short.

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